The suspect, Marissa Williams, was arrested at her aunt's home in Fosters, Ala., in June and charged with solicitation of murder after she allegedly asked her aunt, who was posing on Facebook as a fictional man, to kill her family and take her out of Alabama.

View full size19-year-old Marissa Williams was charged with the solicitation of murder and is in the Tuscaloosa County Jail pending a $30,000 bond. (Tuscaloosa County Jail)

According to the case's deposition, Williams moved in with her aunt in April 2014 but caused problems when she started inviting strangers to come pick her up, or to hang out in the house to drink alcohol. When her aunt asked her to stop, Williams allegedly blocked the woman on Facebook so she could no longer monitor her activities there.

Williams' aunt decided to try a different approach and created a Facebook profile she named Tre 'Topdog' Ellis, a fictional man that she hoped to use to learn more about her niece's habits with strangers on the social media network.

According to the deposition, less than a day after Williams was contacted by 'Tre,' she had given the fake man the address of her aunt's house, invited him to come get drunk and offered to have sex with him if he would pay her $50 cell phone bill.

Soon after, Williams allegedly asked the man she knew as Ellis to help her escape her family and all of Alabama. According to the court documents, she outlined a plan for him to come into her aunt's home and murder her, her fiance, Williams' cousin and the family dog while Williams packed her things into his car.

The aunt, posing as Ellis, was disturbed enough to call the Tuscaloosa County Sheriff's Department. Deputies interviewed Williams, who they say admitted to the solicitation but said she never meant for anyone to actually be killed.

Investigators arrested Williams on June 9 and charged her with solicitation of murder. She was taken to the Tuscaloosa County Jail, where her bond was set at $30,000. She remained jailed Monday morning.

Solicitation of murder is a Class A Felony in Alabama, and if convicted, Williams faces a minimum 10-year prison sentence.